Traveleye.com - The Travel Search Engine

New Mexico Travel Guide

 
 
 
 
    Overview Things to do Suitability Country Info (USA)
    Settled in turn by Native Americans, Spaniards, Mexicans and Yankees, New Mexico is among the most ethnically and culturally diverse of all the states in the US. Each successive group has built upon the legacy of its predecessors; their various histories and achievements are closely intertwined, and in some ways the late-coming white Americans from the north and east have had comparatively little impact. Signs of the region's rich heritage are everywhere, from ancient pictographs and cliff dwellings to the design of the state's license plates, taken from a Zia Indian symbol for the sun - the one near-constant fact of life in this arid land. Northern New Mexico centers on the magnificent landscapes of the Rio Grande Valley , which contains its two finest cities: Santa Fe , the adobe-fronted capital, and the artists' colony and winter resort of Taos , with its nearby pueblo. More than a dozen Pueblo villages can be found in the mountainous area between the two, while to the west lie the evocative ancient ruins at Bandelier and Puyé . The broad swath of central New Mexico along I-40 - the interstate highway that succeeded the old Route 66 - pivots around the state's biggest city, Albuquerque , with the extraordinary mesa-top Pueblo village of Ácoma ("Sky City") an hour's drive to the west. In wild and wide-open southern New Mexico , the deep Carlsbad Caverns are the main attraction, while you can still stumble upon old mining and cattle-ranching towns that have somehow hung on since the end of the Wild West.

    For many visitors, the defining feature of New Mexico is its adobe architecture , as seen on homes, churches, and even shopping malls and motels. Adobe bricks are a sun-baked mixture of earth, sand, charcoal and chopped grass or straw, set with a mortar of much the same composition, and then plastered over with mud and straw. The color of the soil used dictates the color of the final building, and thus subtle variations can be seen all across the state. However, adobe is a far from convenient material: it needs replastering every few years and turns to mud when water seeps up from the ground, so that many buildings have to be sporadically raised and bolstered by the insertion of rocks at their base. These days, most of what looks like adobe is actually painted cement or concrete, but even this looks attractive enough in its own semi-kitsch way, and hunting out such superb old adobes as the remote Santuario de Chimayó on the " High Road " between Taos and Santa Fe, the formidable church of San Francisco de Asis in Ranchos de Taos, or the multitiered dwellings of Taos Pueblo , can provide the focus of an enjoyable New Mexico tour.

    Public transportation is rare in New Mexico; Santa Fe, for example, does not have a rail service. Amtrak trains do, however, pass through Albuquerque, pit stop for transcontinental Greyhound buses and site of the only major airport - linked by shuttle services with the rest of the state. Texas' El Paso is a more convenient transportation hub for Carlsbad. A few companies offer guided coach tours in the Santa Fe and Taos area, but as usual getting around is really best done by car .
    Local Area Weather
    Los Alamos, NM

    Fair
    18°C
    Feels like: 18°C
    5 day forecast (click to dropdown)
     
    © 2012 Traveleye.com Ltd | About Us | Contact Us | Job Vacancies | Advertisers | Privacy Policy

    Much of the information contained within the travel guides and other sections on this website are subject to change at short notice and travellers are urged to verify information on which they are relying with relevant authorities. Traveleye cannot be held responsible for any loss or inconvenience as a result of information above.